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The first victim of the leopard was from Benji Village, and was killed in 1918. For the next eight years, until 1926, people were afraid to venture alone at night on the road between the Hindu shrines of Kedarnath and Badrinath, for it passed through the leopard's territory, and few villagers left their houses after dark. The leopard, preferring human meat, would break down doors, leap through windows, claw through the mud or thatch walls of huts and drag the occupants out before devouring them. It is reputed to have killed over 125 people.

Units of Gurkha soldiers and British soldiers were sent to track it but failed. Attempts to kill the leopard with high powered gin traps and poison also failed. Several well-known hunters tried to capture the leopard and as the British government offered financial rewards. In the autumn of 1925, Jim Corbett took it upon himself to try to kill the leopard and after a ten-week hunt, he successfully did so on 2nd May, 1926.

Corbett's notes revealed that this leopard, an elderly male, was suffering from serious gum recession and tooth loss. The leopard started hunting people eight years before while still young and hence old age might not have been the reason for this leopard to become a man-eater. Jim Corbett wrote that, in his opinion, human bodies left unburied during disease epidemics was the main reason for the Rudraprayag and Panar leopards to become man-eaters.

A leopard, in an area in which his natural food is scarce, finding these bodies very soon acquires a taste for human flesh, and when the disease dies down and normal conditions are established, he very naturally, on finding his food supply cut off, takes to killing human beings. Of the two man-eating leopards of Kumaon, which between them killed over five hundred and twenty-five human beings, one followed on the heels of a very severe outbreak of cholera, while the other followed the mysterious disease which swept through India in 1918 and was called war fever.

In Rudraprayag, there is a sign-board which marks the spot where the leopard was shot. There is a fair held at Rudraprayag commemorating the killing of the leopard.

The animal was the subject of a 2005 low budget BBC Two TV Series Manhunters, in the Episode The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag.,[1] which presents an entirely fictionalized representation of Jim Corbett's hunt for the leopard.